Apparently the cold weather had decided to reform, because when they woke on Easter Day, the sun was shining madly and the birds were singing madly too, and there were boiled eggs for breakfast, gaily-coloured, pink and green and yellow. There were other eggs too, Easter eggs - big chocolate ones from Dr. Carmichael, with chocolates inside; and cardboard ones decorated wth rabbits and lambs and yellow chickens with presents inside from Aunt Lucy, and the little presents that they had given each other.

Here was a fix. They couldn't take an infectious Deborah across Europe, giving her germs to every child they met; Frau Walther at the Gasthof Alpenrose hadn't a corner to offer them. But when the Gräfin heard, she laughed. "Everybody will pack up and come to us," she said. "It is very appropriate that you should be our firsts guests at the Schloss Adlerhorst, new style!"

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Last week I received an e-mail inquiring about the different editions of the Susan books and whether the Children's Press editions had illustrations and dust jackets. I never really used to give much thought to the editions. As I live in Brazil, there's no way I can go around charity shops and second-hand book stores to compare editions, etc. When I started collecting Jane Shaw, I was happy just to get my hands on the books and read the stories. But after a while I began to take an interest in the editions. The original Collins books were often lavishly illustrated and even had colour frontispieces. The original Children's Press books from the late 1950s had dust jackets but were often bereft of illustrations. My copy of Susan's Helping Hand, for instance, has a DJ but no internal pictures. My Seagull Library edition of Susan at School has the illustrations and DJ, but no frontispiece. The same goes for Susan Muddles Through. From Susan's Trying Term onwards, all my books are original Collins editions and I don't imagine they were issued in any other format. However, in the mid to late 1960s, several of Jane Shaw's books were issued in cheaper hardbacks with laminated boards. They had no internal illustrations, but the covers are very colourful and lively. I have Susan Rushes In in this edition and also Crooks Tour. The Jane Shaw books issued in this format are:

All of Jane Shaw's books published by Nelson (Penny, Thomas, Dizzy and Alison) were never issued in cheaper editions. Collins, obviously set on getting as much mileage as possible on the stories, also considered putting out the early Susan stories in Armada paperbacks in the 1970s, but for reasons unknown this idea was shelved.

In Susan at School, Susan and Tessa come across an old map in the library. It is a map of St. Ronan's from long ago and on the map a cryptic message has been scrawled: R. H. Here. The girls decide that it is the hiding place of the legendary treasure known as Ronan's Heap, hidden from the messengers of King Henry who went about the country dissolving the monasteries and plundering their treasures. The hunt for the treasure culminates in a hilarious scene in which the girls dig up rusty old kettles and pap boats. However, a couple of questions are left unanswered. First of all, who wrote the mysterious message and why didn't he go and dig the "treasure" up himself? Susan and Tessa do indeed give some thought to this, with Susan reaching the conclusion that the unhappy treasure hunter of yesteryear died, possibly of old age, before he had a chance to get his hands on the gold and jewels. After feeling sorry for this person, the girls give him no further thought and concentrate on digging. But who wrote the message in the first place? I imagine a former pupil on a rainy afternoon puttering about in the library and doing it for a joke, maybe smiling at the idea of a future pupil taking it seriously. And did Ronan's Heap really exist to begin with? In Jane Shaw's world, it would be safe to imagine that it did, and that Susan was meant to find it in a later story. The author undertook to write four or five books set at St. Ronan's, although only two ever materialized, and I can imagine the treasure being found. In The Moochers, Fiona and Katherine found the famed Pendragon Hoard, so there would be a good chance of Susan uncovering Ronan's Heap in her blundering way.

"Oh goodness, I shouldn't think so," said Aunt Lucy distractedly, "I promised to make ten pounds! Here, have a look at the leaflet, it tells you all about the fête." As if she was going to make the sweets that minute, she stuffed her last piece of toast in her mouth and got up. "Oh, and don't forget to tell the Gascoignes about the fête - they might like to come and I told Mrs. Mountford-Jones that I'd bring as many people as I could--"

There were rebellious mutterings and angry murmurs from the family. They couldn't even enjoy a fête without these Gascoignes, it seemed.

Well, of course, everything now was absolutely clear. Really, this bracelet was creating quite a disturbance. Fancy old Grey Suit padding up and down the Rue de Rivoli for - how many days was it? - on the off-chance of seeing us again! Which of course he had, often. It wasn't so surprising, really, when you think how we haunted that street. I blushed to myself for having the conceit to think that Grey Suit was following us for our irresistible beauty, so I quickly said, "Oh, Monsieur, but of course. Of course we'll bring back the bracelet. As a matter of fact, we saw your---"

Saturday, March 16, 2013

Susan at School,
published by Collins in 1958, is the fifth book in Jane Shaw’s Susan series,
although chronologically it is the second. The story backtracks to early January
just after the events of Susan Pulls the Strings and The Wilsons Won’t Mind to
chronicle Susan’s first term at St. Ronan’s.

The story begins
with Aunt Lucy dropping Charlotte, Midge and Susan off at St. Ronan’s.
Susan is soon introduced to many of the most memorable characters in the series.
First of all, there is her dreamy friend and fellow newcomer, Tessa. Then there
are Charlotte’s fellow prefects, the boisterous but likeable Hippo and the nasty
Hermione Pennington-Smith, known to her many enemies as H. P. Sauce. Susan also
befriends Ann Burton, the girl with a lisp, and Elizabeth Rogers, the budding
actress. However, and unusually, it is on Susan and Tessa that the story mainly
focuses, with Midge in many chapters taking a back seat. Other characters that are
still remembered years later by readers are the teachers: Miss Phillimore, the
imposing head mistress, “Dotty” Johnson, the Latin teacher and the dreaded Miss
Ferrier, a.k.a. the Ferret, the maths mistress.

The story that
follows is one of Jane Shaw’s most humorous and is also interesting because it goes against the grain of the school story genre. The girls do not form a tight bond
with the school. They tend to be underachievers and very little learning takes
place. They go through prep and classes with the minimum possible effort. But Susan
does win her place on the hockey team and is anxious to help provide funds for
the new and badly needed school hall. Not surprisingly, there is a long-lost
treasure supposedly buried on the school grounds that can help achieve this. And
there is the added mystery of dotty Miss Johnson’s mysterious comings and
goings to an old shed.

Unlike other Jane
Shaw stories, this tale thrives on anti-climax. Miss Johnson’s supposed secret
has Susan and Tessa chasing all over the place, but turns out to be an ancient
car that everyone else in the school already knew about. And the most hilarious
is the uncovering of the so-called Ronan’s Heap, the long-lost priceless
treasure. Susan and Tessa are convinced that the location of this collection of
jewels and gold is marked on an old map they find in the school library by the
cryptic message “R. H. Here”. A hilarious scene has the girls unearthing a
collection of broken kettles and other 19th century trinkets. However, not all is lost, as
these items turn out to be worth a few pounds. The story rounds off with a
triumphant Susan helping her team to win a hockey match away from home. Even getting
to the hockey match involves adventure, with Miss Johnson’s ancient car saving
the day, transporting Susan and the team’s equipment to Moreton Grange just in
time.

The book is not
run-of-the-mill Jane Shaw in other ways too. The author gently pokes fun at the
school genre throughout the story by having Tessa compare everything that
happens to her with what she has read in her mother’s old books about boarding
schools (supposedly books penned by the likes of Angela Brazil). Everything that
happens in Tessa’s books is in contrast with the reality of St. Ronan’s. There
is no permanent threat of expulsion, the mistresses have no big secrets and the
prefects do not bully their charges, rather it is the younger pupils who get
the better of them. This story also depends more heavily on slapstick comedy
than any other Jane Shaw story. A lot of humour is derived from Tessa’s slow
intellect, and there are times when this is laid on a little too thickly. A final
point of note is that it is at St. Ronan’s, ironically, that Susan actually
excels at something, i.e. hockey. In all the other stories, her busybody nature
usually does more harm than good, with only the predictable coincidences saving
her at the last minute, but here she actually has a skill that she can proudly
call her own.

Although the
author claimed that she did not enjoy writing school stories, Susan at School
is an excellent, well-plotted piece of work and was a huge success in its day
with many memorable characters. I give it a ten.

Mrs. Carmichael
is the deceased mother of Charlotte, Midge and Bill Carmichael, wife of Dr.
Charles Carmichael and sister-in-law of Margot Lyle and Lucy Carmichael. She is only
referred to in the stories as having passed away when Bill, her youngest child,
was very young. Very little information is provided about her. She studied at
St. Ronan’s and was in St. George’s House. She probably studied with Lucy and
Margot and it is likely that they introduced her to her future husband during
visits to their home during the school holidays. All the children appear to
have come to terms with her passing and the hole that she left in their lives
is partially filled by Aunt Lucy. It is likely that the author decided that the
Carmichael children would have no mother to enable their household to be run by
an “eccentric” Aunt Lucy, as Lucy’s behavior in Susan Pulls the Strings would
be more acceptable coming from an aunt than a mother. However, the concept of
an eccentric Aunt Lucy soon fell away and she became a more “sensible” maternal
figure, and in the subsequent books the absence of the children’s birth mother was always quickly
explained away in the opening pages. The cause of Mrs.
Carmichael’s death is not given, nor is her first name, although it was
possibly Margaret.

Susan too found it very disappointing; so far as she could judge, Tessa's tales were all a lot of rot, boarding-school was just as bad as day-school had been - boring to a degree - hours and hours, days and days, weeks and weeks passed without anything exciting happening at all; instead of mistresses with sinister secrets there was nothing but boring old lessons and prep; instead of prefects persecuting girls and making their lives a misery the boot was on the other foot, as she heard that afternoon when Diana came in and, with a gusty sigh, flung herself as usual into the one armchair.

Friday, March 15, 2013

The Retro Press cover of Crooks Tour. The spine shows a scene from Chapter 2, Crook in the Station, where Julie, Ricky and Fay collar the young man rushing through the train station at Basle. Thanks to Jan Johnson for this nice scan.

Susan didn't want to be a dog-in-the-manger, but really it was asking more than flesh and blood could stand to stay and watch Tessa playing in B game, and she certianly wasn't going back among the rabbits in G game, she was tired of scoring goals. Nobody would miss her, she thought, mournfully, feeling feeling sorry for herself; she would go for a long walk to Maidstone perhaps, or to Tunbridge Wells.

Tuesday, March 12, 2013

In 2008, as part of their Retro Press series, Robert Fredrick Ltd. published Bernese Adventure and Crooks Tour in the United States. Why only these titles were selected is not clear. The covers are very nice laminated boards and the texts are unabridged. Thanks to Jan Johnson for the idea for this post.

Eventually she stood on a chair, and with a lot of puffing and blowing and straining she managed to heave her suitcase and hook it on to the front of the wardrobe. She had just got down and pushed the chair away when suddenly to her horror the whole contraption, wardrobe, suitcase, dresses, the lot, swayed slowly forward and crashed to the floor.

They all bustled about getting more stuff to burn, and then at last Cousin Barbara thought the potatoes would be ready. She poked them out of the fire with a long stick. "Oh, just a minute, Susie!" she cried. "They're burning hot, let them cool a little!"

"But it's half the fun, surely," said Charlotte, "to get your fingers burnt---" and she seized the charred object, which didn't look as if there was an edible bite in it, and broke it in two and began to eat the delicious, flurry inside. Cousin Barbara came in for much praise for her excellent timing, the potatoes were cooked to perfection.

About Wichwood Village

Welcome to Wichwood Village, a blog about the life and works of Scottish author Jane Shaw. Between 1939 and 1969, she published over 40 books and numerous short stories for children. Her light sense of humour, captivating characters and their madcap banter are hallmarks of her work. This blog is dedicated to exploring the protagonists, artwork and locations of her work and her life in general, with reviews and comments.

How I became a Jane Shaw enthusiast is explained in the first post of this blog, which you can read here.